Due to copyright restrictions, the access to the full text of this article is only available via subscription.We investigate the existence of lottery-like preferences of investors at Borsa Istanbul. Proxying these preferences with demand for stocks with extreme positive returns (“MAX”), we establish that high-MAX stocks’ significantly underperform low-MAX stocks, controlling for a series of potential explanatory return characteristics. We find that the negative relationship between MAX and expected returns is driven by stocks strongly preferred by individual investors and strengthens following periods of high investor sentiment. A natural experiment suggests that the MAX discount increased during the period of temporary short-sale restricti...
This study examines the significance of extreme positive returns measured by maximum daily returns i...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
This study explores the MAX effect in the Philippine Stock Market and found strong evidence for the ...
This thesis revisits the evidence recently found on the negative influence of extreme positive daily...
This study investigates the presence of the MAX effect – stocks with extreme daily (positive) return...
In this paper, we show that extreme returns can predict future returns in the Turkishstock market. W...
Motivated by the recent evidence of investors' preference for stocks with lottery- type payoffs docu...
This paper assesses the effects of investors’ lottery-seeking behavior on expected returns in the No...
This paper studies the role that risk and mispricing play in the negative relation between extreme p...
A value-weighted (equal-weighted) portfolio comprised of the twenty percent of the stocks on the Osl...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
We find a robust negative relation between skewness/lottery-like features, proxied by maximum return...
We form indexes of overpriced and underpriced stocks by ranking stocks based on the disposition effe...
We examine the significance of extreme positive returns of the previous month (MAX) as a return pr...
We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns (MAX) in the cross-sectional pricing of ...
This study examines the significance of extreme positive returns measured by maximum daily returns i...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
This study explores the MAX effect in the Philippine Stock Market and found strong evidence for the ...
This thesis revisits the evidence recently found on the negative influence of extreme positive daily...
This study investigates the presence of the MAX effect – stocks with extreme daily (positive) return...
In this paper, we show that extreme returns can predict future returns in the Turkishstock market. W...
Motivated by the recent evidence of investors' preference for stocks with lottery- type payoffs docu...
This paper assesses the effects of investors’ lottery-seeking behavior on expected returns in the No...
This paper studies the role that risk and mispricing play in the negative relation between extreme p...
A value-weighted (equal-weighted) portfolio comprised of the twenty percent of the stocks on the Osl...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
We find a robust negative relation between skewness/lottery-like features, proxied by maximum return...
We form indexes of overpriced and underpriced stocks by ranking stocks based on the disposition effe...
We examine the significance of extreme positive returns of the previous month (MAX) as a return pr...
We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns (MAX) in the cross-sectional pricing of ...
This study examines the significance of extreme positive returns measured by maximum daily returns i...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
This study explores the MAX effect in the Philippine Stock Market and found strong evidence for the ...